Antitrust

Apple hit with EU antitrust charges over Apple Pay exclusivity

Apple will settle.

Why?

Because of this little bit: ".....Apple could be fined up to 10% of annual revenues..."

That's not peanuts, and a cudgel like that should make Apple *want* to settle.

Think about this: the EU has laws governing this sort of exclusion by an OEM. Plainly, it is illegal; *according to EU rules.

As I understand them, and fair warning, IANAL, you cannot exclude other manufacturers from utilizing standards-based functionality that the customer/consumer - in this instance, the iPhone owner - has already paid for.

For example: it would be like Apple requiring iPhone owners to only connect to Apple-branded Wi-Fi access points.

Which would be insane.

As this situation is.

Apple Pay's use of NFC compounds Apple's problem, IMO.

Because it isn't an Apple-created technology, and is standards-based.

Moreover, Apple has had enough time to come up with the security framework and privacy scheme that it would have posited would benefit iPhone owners.

It didn't do so.

Therein lies their problem: their (Apple's) steadfast refusal to even consider 3rd-party payment processors' use of NFC has been exposed for what it is: Apple not wanting any competition.

That is a clear violation of EU antitrust laws. I think.

What do you think I am missing?

What Apple is doing with Apple Pay isn’t new, their thing, or an Apple innovation.

Apple just took NFC payments to a whole new level with Apple Pay.

They also did so using basically available technology that they repackaged magnificently.

iPhones may not be the dominant devices numerically; they are so in terms of buying power.

The iPhone demographics skew firmly towards the well-heeled, and that is why everyone wants in.

Suffice it to say, While Apple has about 20% of the global smartphone market, Apple banks over 80% of available profits for ALL phones.

That really means that, yes, Android phone OEMs deliver crappy devices and crappy user experiences.

What I think though, is that other payment system operators such as PayPal just want access to the iPhone ecosystem without having to share both profits and customer data with Apple.

I hope Apple can come out with a scheme whereby other pay processors can use iPhone NFC, but cannot harvest customer data.

That, to me, would be the ideal middle ground.

Original story at The New York Times.

© 2002 – 2021, John Obeto II for Blackground Media Unlimited

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Making Friends 101: Annoy Mega-Telco

There is nothing more in telling about an arriviste company than when they suddenly try to bite off more than they can chew.

Case in point is Google.

If this report in ComputerWorld in correct, and I have no reason to doubt that magazine, then Google wants to take on Mega-Telco by, get this, coming up with a system allowing

mobile operators to compete in an auction for the chance to offer you service and then switching from one operator to the next multiple times a day to get the best rate or more bandwidth.

Stop it! I’m so not making it up!

Is this arrogance, hubris, confidence in your technology, assurance in the righteousness of your now-discredited mission statement*, faith in your barrister, a belief in your manifest destiny, or worse, a deadly combination of all of the above?

Like death and taxes, one of the certainties of life in these United States is the sacrosanct nature of the business practices of Mega-Corp, each in their own spaces: Mega-Telco, Mega-Oilco, Mega-Energyco.

In no jurisdiction of Terra have these companies ever being reigned in. Even the United States government couldn’t do jack: hasn’t AT&T reconstituted?

In plain English, you just don’t fuck with them.

Now come these clowns from the Googleplex in Mountain View trying to accomplish a Sisyphean task of taking down Mega-Telco!

If they think that Microsoft is a formidable opponent, then taking down Mega-Telco is tantamount to the difference between playing with a slingshot, and undertaking an interplanetary Earth-return mission to Jupiter.

FYI, Mega-Telco co-wrote the book on bribery lobbying!

They never play fair, and they are very proactive in squashing gnats.

I am gleefully looking forward to seeing how this unfolds.

*Mission Statement: Do no Evil. Do no evil my a$$!

More on Taiwan’s antitrust craziness

In comments to my post, Taiwan starts orbiting the silly galaxy, reader ‘adacosta’ feels it is a sovereignty issue, while reader ‘Michael Turton’ starts back down that tired line of Windows Vista is bad.

Since I spent quite a few minutes on my reply,...(read more)

Taiwan starts orbiting the silly galaxy

Just when you think it is safe to go outside comes the news of another formerly sensible country entering the silly constellation.

This time it is Taiwan!

In news straight out of Mad magazine, the powers that be at that manufacturing powerhouse have decided...(read more)

Intel’s global antitrust mess

AMD has been battling it out with Intel in the courts in the US.

About a year ago, we were able to get a teleconference with AMD Executive VP and general counsel, Tom McCoy, the details of which I posted here after a personal follow-on interview with Tom.

Well, a couple of weeks ago, the other shoe dropped, with the United States Federal Trade Commission, FTC, escalating their former informal inquiry into Intel's trade practices into a formal full-blown investigation.

After that, a cascade of (mostly) bad news has been dropping for Intel.

Read the entire article

AMD vs Intel

The case for Smarter Choice

Over the past couple of years, starting with a blog post I made back in June of 2005 titled AMD sues Intel, I have followed the proceedings with a jaundiced eye.

Over the last year, especially as AMD seemed to slip in the marketplace, the network effects of Intel's monopoly position have become more apparent to all.

The extent of the illegalities of those network effects are up to a (US) Federal court and perhaps competition authorities in Europe and South Korea who are currently investigating the legality of Intel's business practices to decide. There is almost no doubt that Intel's behavior would be declared illegal, for example, in 2005 the Japan Fair Trade Commission ruled that Intel did indeed engage in illegal business practices that violated Japan's Antimonopoly Act, harming Japanese consumers.

Continuing their policy of open communications with the online community, AMD Executive Vice-President, Legal Affairs, and Chief Administrative Officer Tom McCoy spoke to several members of the online and blogging communities on June 12, 2007, about the state of the now nearly 2-year old antitrust lawsuit.

What the lawsuit is about is basically, choice.

Choice for the consumer, choice for OEMs, choice for the enterprise.

The exact magnitude of Intel's transgressions have not been made public, and unfortunately, Tom McCoy, as a member of the executive team at AMD, could not enlighten us further, since the discovery documents are under a protective (judicial) seal.

A summary of the original complaint find the following accusations:

  • forcing major customers such as Dell, Sony, Toshiba, Gateway, and Hitachi into Intel-exclusive deals in return for outright cash payments, discriminatory pricing or marketing subsidies conditioned on the exclusion of AMD;
  • forcing other major customers such as NEC, Acer, and Fujitsu into partial exclusivity agreements by conditioning rebates, allowances and market development funds (MDF) on customers' agreement to severely limit or forego entirely purchases from AMD;
  • establishing a system of discriminatory, retroactive, first-dollar rebates triggered by purchases at such high levels as to have the intended effect of denying customers the freedom to purchase any significant volume of processors from AMD;
  • threatening retaliation against customers for introducing AMD computer platforms, particularly in strategic market segments such as commercial desktop;
  • establishing and enforcing quotas among key retailers such as Best Buy and Circuit City, effectively requiring them to stock overwhelmingly or exclusively, Intel computers, artificially limiting consumer choice;
  • forcing PC makers and tech partners to boycott AMD product launches or promotions;
  • and abusing its market power by forcing on the industry technical standards and products which have as their main purpose the handicapping of AMD in the marketplace.

Just how nasty is this behavior?

Can you imagine if either Microsoft, in operating systems and applications, Google in search, or Boeing in aircraft pulls this kind of nonsense?

Let us go through each point in that summary:

  1. Cash payments. While not illegal per se, non-disclosure of those same monies should be. In fact, Dell, if I remember correctly, is the subject of a shareholder lawsuit alleging that the company (Dell) for years used the cash payments from Intel to prop up profits, up to the tune of about $1 billion US per year.
  2. Exclusivity agreements. The exclusivity covenants in those contracts require the companies involved to deal which Intel to the exclusion of other CPU manufacturers.
  3. Channel stuffing. Another form of exclusion, this insidious behavior makes sure that the vendor's warehouses are always full, of Intel products, thereby disallowing the purchase of product from other CPU manufacturers.
  4. Threats. This is an especially odious allegation. In jurisdictions where antitrust authorities and/or AMD prevailed, it was proven that Intel would threaten to either stop or slow product deliveries, cancel POs among others, in order to get vendors to toe the line.
  5. Quotas. Can you imagine being told what percentage of products to carry? That, essentially is what this illegal behavior is.

    For example, a retailer is told that in order to obtain market development funds, or MDFs, the retailer has to carry 90% Intel products.

    Since the kickback, and there should be no doubt about it, it is a kickback, is a large amount, retailers, who operate on razor-thin margins, become hooked on it.

    If the customer failed to adhere to those levels, not only did the MDFs shrivel, but the rebates vanished. Is that a financial headlock or what?

  6. Boycotts. Of product launches under threats! Just where were the adults minding the store at Intel?
  7. Exclusionary standards. Can anyone say 'Centrino'? 'Viiv'? Why should a standard be locked in to only one company's family of products?

In the several months since, the concerns of AMD seem more and more valid, especially in the light of current news of Intel gaining market share in several industry segments.

According to Intel, AMD is whining about nothing. The Intel comeback is centered around these two positions:

  1. AMD is complaining about discounting. How untrue is this? Everywhere you go, the lowest-priced system is always an AMD-based system. In fact, Intel has always been able to maintain margins even in the hotly contested CPU space by dint of pricing threats. ?

    In other words, if a customer agrees to give a specified amount of shelf space to Intel products, or better yet, go exclusive with Intel, the customer would realize better margins by keeping competitors out and reducing customer choice.

    It is particularly telling that AMD couldn't even give away CPUs! Since the customer would suddenly be subject to increased prices and zero market-dev funds, most customers declined offers of free CPUs.

  2. AMD has zero capacity. Not true, in fact, I was informed that AMD has more than enough capacity, captive or external to feed any requirements that they might need.

Due to my ineptness with the WebEX teleconferencing unit, I was unable to ask further questions before the session ended. However, an email to Scott at AMD for answers enabled me to get another crack at Tom (McCoy), this time telephonically.

In our phone call on Monday, June 18, 2007, I had three questions for Tom (my questions in italics, Tom McCoy's answer boldfaced and italicized):

  1. A public instance of Intel requiring a lockout of other CPUs is the Skype situation, where Skype and Intel entered into an agreement whereby Skype would create VOIP software that would work exclusively with Intel products, to the detriment of consumers who had alternative CPU systems, of which the largest rival is AMD.

    Apart from the Skype case, are there more overt or subdulous contractual agreements to modify software to both exclude non-Intel CPUs and customer choice that are public?

    Since it delved into matters under litigation, Tom declined to answer.

    However, I seem to remember Intel's infamous compilers, which, due to their CPU-ID schemes were optimized (read that as rigged) for Intel CPUs; the end results being that results of tests using those compilers had results dishonestly skewed in favor of Intel microprocessors.

  2. Does AMD use MDFs, and if so, do they contain either similarly restrictive covenants as Intel's or contain sufficiently vague language as to be misconstrued as being the same as Intel MDFs?

    The emphatic answer: NO!

    Tom actually said, "…we DO have an MDF program, but it is highly collaborative with our customers and bears no resemblance to Intel's."

    Tom explained that

    1. that was not the AMD way,
    2. AMD wanted design and product wins based on the products, and
    3. AMD did not have the market share power to even attempt such a move.
  3. In addition to legal/contractual restraints, are you also asking for financial redress from Intel?

    As part of the filing, yes.If a jury finds Intel guilty in the U.S. antitrust suit we would be entitled to damages. However, AMD would prefer to have a level playing field to compete rather than money.

    I got the feeling that AMD seeks the following:

    1. A level playing field
    2. An opportunity to collaborate with vendors and OEMs
    3. No restrictions on competitions, no elevation of status among CPU vendors by judicial fiat
    4. A restriction on Intel's abuse of monopoly power.

All of Tom's answers, especially that about not using MDFs since it was not the AMD way, spoke directly to why AMD is really highly regarded amongst the smaller system OEMs around the world.

It is not their way!

Which is true.

Looking back at AMD over the years, you would find that Intel fired the first salvo when AMD's x86 clones totally decimated Intel in the eyes of 2nd-tier OEMs.

The AMD way: compete.

In closing, I would see that choice, especially consumer choice, is the real reason behind AMD's lawsuit. It further validates the decision we made at Logikworx nearly eighteen months ago to recommend Opteron as the price/performance server CPU to our clients, and the Athlon as our recommended desktop CPU.

I would like to thank Tom for taking the time on both days, June 12 in the web conference, and on the phone with me yesterday, June 18, to inform me, and by proxy, all of you, about the status of this lawsuit.

I hope that AMD prevails in this lawsuit, and sanity returns to the executive at Intel, getting them to compete where it matters most to consumers: the design, production, and pricing of microprocessors.

One thing AMD has in its favor is goodwill. Goodwill from 2nd-tier OEMs, vendors, and the enthusiast community. They have come through for us several times with their CPUs and extremely attractive pricing. We laud them for that.

AMD also reaches out to non-mainstream media in a very unconventional way, giving us unprecedented access to C-level executives at the firm, even though we do not represent media networks with 3-letter acronyms.

In closing, I would like to thank Scott Carroll, his team at AMD, and indeed, AMD for not only giving us access, but also making it timely and unfettered.

John Obeto II

Editor-in-Chief, SmallBizVista.com, and The Interlocutor

John Obeto is also Managing Partner & Chief Technology Officer of Logikworx and blogs at www.absolutevista.com.


Related AMD posts:

Lost emails at the CEO-level

How will 2007 shape up for Intel?

While developing his thesis on Vista migration, Intel's CEO apparently forgot to save emails as required for the current lawyerfest called AMD vs Intel.

Hopefully, this will not snowball.

Then again, why not?

For someone like me who thought his dissertation was at best imbecilic, it was 他人の不幸は蜜の味

Translation: tanin no fukou wa mitsu no aji

© 2007, John Obeto II for SmallBizVista.com®

Is HP looking to get into an antitrust mess?

One of the weekly business glossies is reporting that HP is supposedly bribing incentivizing retailers to drop store and aftermarket cartridges in favor of HP cartridges.

To the effect that Staples is dropping its store brand entirely?

IANAL, but this smells like unfair practice or injuring the competition to me.

If I were a buyer of inkjets, I would be on the phone to Bill Lerach of Lerach Coughlin Stoia Geller Rudman & Robbins LLP, so fast and looking to screw them back.

Isn't it enough that the stuff costs more than gold?

Coming right after the pretexting mess, do the holders of HP need this?

Mark, say it ain't so!

Leave well alone, and lower prices, that's how to compete!

© 2007, John Obeto II for SmallBizVista.com®

Microsoft settles Iowa Suit

What a land grab!

Now Microsoft can go on without this distraction from a bunch of country-bumpkin Playa' wanna-bes.

The morons running the antitrust department in Des Moines have absolutely no clues about monopolies.

If they did, they should have brought a suit against AAPL for being a monopoly as well.

EDIT:
I am reminded by Royce that Mississippi still has a pending antitrust action against Microsoft.

To which I answer, "Mississippi? Pfeui!"

© 2007, John Obeto II for SmallBizVista.com®